At just 20′ by 8′ it unfolds into five different rooms. Yes, this design packs a kitchen, dining room, bedroom, living room and library.

And guess what? It transforms at the push of a button. Hence the name.

If that’s not cool enough you should also know that it’s prefabricated using recycled and/or recyclable materials.

This might be a tiny house that’s truly at the cutting edge of sustainability and innovation. But there’s a catch.. It still needs a roof once it’s unfolded. I didn’t like that.

We have a video tour, interview and design overview that you can watch below:

The first ten minutes of the video is an interview with Adam (the designer/architect) which goes over how the container home was designed. So if you want to skip that and go directly to touring the house start at about 10:18. Warning: the video contains occasional foul language.

Be sure to watch beginning at around 7:30 though because you’ll get to see how it was built in fast forward which is really cool/interesting.

I think this design is more art than house because it’s missing a roof. There’s also fake furniture throughout that looks as if it’s just molded material. But the design is still innovative.

I guess it’s something you can use to put within your existing barn or warehouse?

Alex

Alex is a contributor and editor for TinyHouseTalk.com and the always free Tiny House Newsletter. He has a passion for exploring and sharing tiny homes (from yurts and RVs to tiny cabins and cottages) and inspiring simple living stories. We invite you to send in your story and tiny home photos too so we can re-share and inspire others towards a simple life too. Thank you!

I think it is an interesting concept; kind of like the concept cars at the auto show. The hydraulic rams and mounts take up a lot of precious room and form tripping hazards. With hydraulics it is not a mater of if they will leak but WHEN they will leak. The oil is some nasty stuff.